THE MICHIGAN AL m _ _ Detroit Trounces Toronto, 4-2, For second cup Triumph t t Grosso Leads Wings To Win In Stanley Tilt Frequent Penalties Mark Contest As Stanowski Stars ForMaple Leafs TORONTO, April 7.-(A)-The ir- repressible Detroit Red Wings made it two in a row over Toronto Maple Leafs tonight, scoring a 4-2 victory in the second game of their best-of- seven Stanley Cup final series. Neither team was able to score in the opening minutes although pen- alties were frequent and both clubs were at full strength when Don Grosso poked in the Red Wings' first tally at 11:47. He got the disc on a pass from Eddie Wares. Mud Brune- teau made the second Detroit tally at 14:17. There were seven penalties in the first period, Bob Goldham of Toronto twice being sent to the cell. Toronto missed a chance to break into the scoring column at the start of the second period when Syl Apps passed to the mouth of the cage but no one was there to give it the added push. The action got hotter and with each team a man short, Sweeney Schriner scored on a pass from Billy Taylor and Wally Stanowski. There were only six penalties in this period, including the first of the season for Apps. The attendance was announced at 14,079. Toronto went on the attack from the start but Grosso bagged his second goal at 4:15. Gerry Brown and Schriner were penalized and Schriner had a few seconds of his sentence left when Davidson was sent off. Gerry Brown deflected Bush's hard shot into the nets for Detroit's fourth goal. Stanowski counted the Leafs' sec- ond in the 15th minute. Toronto pressed for the remainder of the game but couldn't crack the Detroit defense and there was no further scoring. Brody was taken off andj Leafs sent six men to the attack in the last minute. , * , 11 a - a p - - a - - ® - ..mt s PORTFOLIO " Presenting Johnny Coulon " World's Greatest Bantam By HAL WILSON Daily Sports Editor .. . :. t (The columns this week are beings written by junior members of the staff who are applying for the posi- tion of sports editor for the coming year. Today's Sportfolio Is by Hoe Seltzer.) By HOE SELTZER NEXT TIME you're in Chicago go down to 1154 East 63rd Street, climb up to the gym on the third floor and walk right in. A very little man with a bald head and a happy smile will step forward to greet you and thus you will have the honor of shaking the hand of the greatest bantamweight fighter of all time. His name is Johnny Coulon. Now John stands only five feet and one inch in military heels and his weight when he is all out of condition and bloated up is a scan- dalous 110 pounds. His face beneath a pate which constantly maintains a high gloss is absolutely angelic with -that gentle smile and those rimless spectacles. A very mild man indeed, Johnny Coulon looks like.G A ND IN TRUTH outside the ring John was ever the mildest of human folk. But inside his theater of business--and this is what made himn the greatest scrapper of all time up to 120epounds-never was there a boxer who combined dazzling speed with murderous fury as in this man. A few men have been faster than Johnny and a smaller number could hit harder, but never were these two requisites of a great fighter combined so flawlessly as in the 108 pound dynamo who slashed to ribbons ev-: erything that faced him in the ring between the years 1907 and 1914. They say Johnny is 53 years old. Looking at him you say it might be true. But see him work out in the ring and you swear it's a lie. No man with that many candles on his cake could flit about so fast afoot, could handle his dukes with suchj catlike speed, could hit with such# devastating force. A man active all his life should be burned out at 53. But Johnny isn't and he insists he has not had his system spiked with monkey glands. He just relaxes,1 he says. He keeps himself as loose as Mrs. Kelly's jelly at all times and thus never needlessly tires himself out. It's that simple, Johnny claims. OHN'S most stunning knockout victories were scored against oppo- nents so foul-tempered, so savage and devastating that the good public wondered that he even had the cour- age to face them. But the fact is he welcomed these bouts with un- paralleled glee because they were set-ups for the easy-going style of fighting that belied his homicidal. tendencies. Good strong boys Coulon always calls such fellows, and the picture of him handling one is sheer beauty to contemplate: The bells ring ... John glides out from his corner, feints and slips off to the right .'... his opponent whistles a crushing counter right 1 through empty air ... John stands off, shuffling easily and now the more wary foe figures he will line up this jack-in-the-box first before he cuts loose again . . . slowly he plods after Coulon, waving his right mauler in menacing circles ... now le's got this guy ... swoosh ... missed again, dammit. . . why doesn't that ninny stand up and fight... Round two ... John's breathing easy, but his enemy isn't . . . it takes as much out of a guy to miss as to hit . . . so this Coulon clown is the champ, huh? ..". somebody's been handing me the malarkey ... all he's got is a powder puff left ... I'm sick of waiting ... I'm gonna wade right in and... BOOM!!! . . . John's been wait- ing for it . . . the sucker drops his guard and comes plowing in . .. a smashing left counter to straighten him up, plant that right cross just below the ear, a left hook to the short ribs and he can't breathe any more, a right under the heart to finish the job ... ten seconds count ... Coulon, winner and still chain- peen ... by a K.O. THAT'S Johnny Coulon the fighter. There is also Johnny Coulon the phenomenon, the miracle man who defies the men of science. As above stated, the gentleman weighs a mere 110 pounds. And yet, if he so wills, there is not a man on earth who can lift him off the floor.C It's something absolutely inexplic- able. You grasp him about the waistl and virtually toss him up in the air. Then he lightly touches your right wrist and under your left ear and you, try again. And nothing happens. It is like trying to lift up one of the columns of Angell Hall. The scientific boys heard about this when Johnny was over in France in 1917 and they said why this is a lot of bushwah, 110 pounds is 110 pounds and that is that and we will dispose of this matter right away. So they corralled the strong- est man in all France, and the fel- low was of course insulted when they asked him to try and lift up this little shrimp. The Sandow straddled the scale John was standing on and started lifting. Five minutes later he had to hang up his leopard skin and go home in shamefaced defeat. The best he had done was reduce the unfathomable Coulon's avoirdupois to 21 pounds. The savants scratch- ed their beards and mumbled dees ees verree strange eendeed and Johnny went home still unlifted. WHEN the big show in Europe was over John came back to 63rd Street, Chicago and set up a gym- nasium. And there one finds him today in complete contentment as he teaches youths interested in learning how to box as much of the ring wiz- ardry which was the scourge of the bantams for seven years as the youngsters are capable of absorbing. Golf Tryouts Are Scheduled For Saturday Weather Fails To Keep Linksmen Off Course; Ben Smith Scores 75 By BUD LOW Despite the fact that there was a constant downpour of rain all day yesterday, six Varsity golfers and one freshman tryout played a full round of 18 holes at the University course. This is indicative of one thing- Wolverine linksmen are not letting any grass grow under their feet in preparation for their shortened spring. trip which begins one week from Saturday at Lexington against the University of Kentucky. Tryouts Saturday. Coach Ray Courtright announced yesterday that 36-hole tryouts for both Varsity and freshmen would be played this coming Saturday in or- der to help determine his squad of fourteen. Candidates are to play 18 holes in the morning and the same number in the afternoon. Those golfers who cannot play at this time should contact Coach Courtright im- mediately to arrange to play their rounds another time, preferably Fri- day or Sunday. In all probability, Ray will have a difficult task in trying to choose the 1942 Varsity golf squad because of the array of talent. The team will be built around the fou' returning lettermen and strengthened by the addition of a number of new men, any one of whom should be capable of filling the vacancies. Smith Shoots 75 Blazing Ben Smith gave warning to other aspirants for the individual championship in the Conference by shooting a 75 on Monday. This is considered exceptionally good for the beginning of the season and shows promise of lower scores later in the year. Only last week sophomore Bill Ludolph went around the course with a 79, another very creditable per- formance. Consistently, scores in the low eighties have been turned in by other Varsity members, which means that Michigan's golf team is shaping up rather well. Frosh Will Repli Veterans Of Vc By BUD HENDEL Maybe nobody ever thought of it, but some sort of medal should be awarded Matt Mann and his Michi- gan swimmers. Over the span of the last four years, only the unbeatable football team of Minnesota can boast of being a more consistent Big Ten athletic aggregation than the Wol- verine natators. For instance, the season just con- cluded was the worst Mann and his lads suffered during this four-year period. But, it can't be called an unsuccessful campaign in any sense of the word. The Maize and Blue won nine dual meets and lost only one, that to the powerful Yale crew, 59-16. Also, the lightning Eli pad- dlers wrested the National Collegiate crown from the Wolverine head after it had reposed there for eight straight years in defiance of bold attempts from both the Bulldogs and Ohio State to remove it. Big Ten Champs But one of Michigan's swimming titles did not pass into other hands this year, and for the fourth consecu- tive season the Wolverines captured the Big Ten championship. Ohio State made a strong challenge, but the Mannmen won the final relay and the meet, 54-50. The nine dual meet triumphs of the natators were racked up at the expense of Am- herst, Olneyville, Ohio State-twice, Northwestern, Purdue, Iowa, Michi- gan State and Minnesota, and all of them by decisive margins. Coach Mann expects to have a better squad next year, losing only, five men and having a better-than- average group of freshmen to draw from. But Ohio State will also be srengthened by the addition of a promising yearling crew, and it looks like the Wolverines will have a real battle on their hands to retain their Western Conference laurels. Five Men Lost The five men lost by graduation are Capt. Dobby Burton, the Share- met brothers-Gus and John, Dick Riedl and Strother (T-Bone) Mar- tin. The freshmen expected to add power and speed to next season's crew are backstroker Harry Holiday, ice Departing irsity Swim Team Einbinder, freestylers Mert Church, Ace Cory and Chuck Fries. and divers Bill Chickering and Brud Lary. Besides this, the Michigan skipper will still have freestylers Jack Pat- ten, Walt Stewart, Lou Kivi, Bob West and Bruce Allen, breaststroker Jim Skinner, and divers Alex Canja Iand Lou Haughey. Both Patten and Skinner are dual titleholders, having captured the 220 freestyle and 200- yard breaststroke championships re- spectively in the Big Ten and Na- tional Collegiate meets. 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